1 / 13

The Effect of Gender-Stereotypes on Explicit and Implicit Career Preferences

The Effect of Gender-Stereotypes on Explicit and Implicit Career Preferences. Reuma Gadassi and Itamar Gati Hebrew University of Jerusalem Presented at the International Counseling Psychology Conference Chicago, March 2008. THE GOAL studying.

Download Presentation

The Effect of Gender-Stereotypes on Explicit and Implicit Career Preferences

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Effect of Gender-Stereotypes on Explicit and Implicit Career Preferences Reuma Gadassi and Itamar Gati Hebrew University of Jerusalem Presented at the International Counseling Psychology Conference Chicago, March 2008

  2. THE GOALstudying • the possible effects of gender-stereotypes on the process of choosing occupations • the effects of approaching career choices in terms of: • Preferred occupations versus • Preferences in important career-related aspects The question: does the method of eliciting occupational aspiration moderates the effect of gender-stereotypes on occupational choices?

  3. METHOD • Participants226 females (74.1%) and 79 males (25.9%) who entered the Future DirectionsInternet site, and chose to fill out the research questionnaire in return for feedback. • Age: 17-30, mean=23 (median = 22) • Years of education: mean=12. 7 (median 12)

  4. Future Directionshttp://www.kivunim.com An Israeli website in Hebrew, designed for assisting deliberating individuals in making their career decisions. It is a public service and is offered free of charge.

  5. Making Better Career Decisions -an Internet-based career guidance system (http://mbcd.intocareers.org) The Rationale the dialogue is divided into distinct stages, corresponding to thePICModel’s stages(Gati & Asher, 2001): - Prescreening (based on sequential elimination) - In-depth exploration - Choice

  6. Making Better Career Decisions

  7. On-line Questionnaire • Background information (age, gender, years of education) • Participants were asked to "specify 5 to 10 (or more) occupations that you think are suitable for you" (the directly elicited list) • The Career Preference Questionnaire used to elicit the participants’ career preferences in terms of career related-aspects (relative importance & preferred levels) • Personal information: participants were asked to report a mailing address for receiving feedback

  8. Procedure • The data consisted of two lists of occupations for each participant: • the directly elicited list – the preferred occupations as reported by the individual • the indirectly derived list – occupations that were found compatible with the user’s aspect-based preferences by MBCD based onthe sequential-elimination-search • Gender Dominance Ratings of occupations (1-feminine – 5-masculine) • Each participant received (by mail or e-mail): • a list of promising alternatives that was produced by MBCD • a user code for MBCD (= 16 US$)

  9. Design Preferences in career-related aspects Data from participant: Directly Elicited list of preferred occupations comparison Occupational information database Indirectly Derived listof recommendedoccupations Matching preferences & database MBCD

  10. RESULTS

  11. Conclusion The comparison of the directly elicited and the indirectly derived lists of occupations supported the hypothesis: using preferences in terms of aspects may lead to a less gender-stereotypical choice for both men and women

  12. Implications • When discussing clients’ future options, it is important to elicit the individual’s preferences in terms of aspects rather than in terms of occupational titles • In this manner, individuals’ career decisions are less likely to be influenced by stereotypes, and would perhaps consider a wider range of occupations

  13. For further information, write to: Itamar.gati@huji.ac.il WWW.CDDQ.ORG

More Related